US, NATO allies edge for Military options in Libya



WASHINGTON: US and Nato edged closer to formulate a military response to the escalating violence in Libya as the alliance boosted surveillance flights over the country and the Obama administration signaled it might be willing to help arm Moammar Qadhafi’s opponents. Europe, meanwhile, kick-started international efforts to impose a no-fly zone.


It still appeared unlikely that US warplanes or missiles soon would deploy in Libya, which may be sliding toward civil war, but the continuing violence increased pressure on Washington to do something or spell out its plan.

The violence ‘‘perpetrated by the government in Libya is unacceptable,’’ President Barack Obama declared as he authorized $15 million in new humanitarian aid to help and evacuate people fleeing the fighting. He also warned those still loyal to Qadhafi that they will be held to account for a violent crackdown that continued Monday with warplanes launching multiple airstrikes on opposition fighters seeking to advance on Tripoli.

‘‘I want to send a very clear message to those who are around Col. Qadhafi,’’ Obama told reporters in the Oval Office alongside Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who is in Washington for meetings. ‘‘It is their choice to make how they operate moving forward. And they will be held accountable for whatever violence continues to take place.’’

The president spoke as US military planes shuttled between Europe and Tunisia, ferrying in supplies and taking out some of the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled across the Libyan border. As international humanitarian efforts stepped up, Obama said Nato was consulting about ‘‘a wide range of potential options, including potential military options, in response to the violence that continues to take place inside of Libya.’’

As a first step, Nato agreed on Monday to increase AWACs surveillance flights over Libya from 10 to 24 hours a day to give the alliance a better picture of both the humanitarian and military situations on the ground, US Ambassador to Nato Ivo Daalder told reporters. Nato’s governing body is meeting over the next two days to come up with contingency plans for military operations to be considered at a Thursday meeting of the alliance’s defense ministers in Brussels, he said.

Meanwhile, Britain and France were drafting a UN Security Council resolution that would authorize a no-fly zone over Libya aimed at protecting Qadhafi’s foes from military air strikes, diplomats said. US officials said a no-fly zone remains an option but suggested there was little enthusiasm for such a complex and expensive operation and questioned whether it would serve its intended purposes.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said a military response was no more likely now than it was before the surge in violence. But, he said arming the rebels was a possibility even as officials denied a report that the US had asked Saudi Arabia to provide weapons to rebels fighting Qadhafi and other officials noted it would violate a UN arms embargo imposed on Libya last week.

At the State Department, spokesman P.J. Crowley pointed out that arming the rebels would be illegal unless the UN arms embargo were modified or lifted.

Hundreds of people have died since Libya’s uprising began, although tight restrictions on media make it nearly impossible to get an accurate tally.

The US and United Nations have imposed sanctions against Qadhafi’s regime, and US military forces have also moved closer to Libya’s shores to back up demands that Qadhafi step down.

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